A reference to Walt Whitman's "I Hear America Singing" => "I, Too". Langston Hughes' poem adds the African American identity to Whitman's list of ordinary people who constitute and contribute to American collective identity.
Paradox of social injustice => "I, Too". Hughes depicts the social inequality of black people, who are traditionally confined to servitude. He hopes, however, that this will change eventually.
Uses set meter and rhyme scheme => "From the Dark Tower". The poem's rhyme scheme is ABBA.
Symbol of wasted effort => "From the Dark Tower". Black people are the ones who plant, while white people reap.
Stone of anger and resentment => "From the Dark Tower". It depicts black people's anger at being constantly and systematically oppressed.
Uses free verse => "I, Too". Hughes' poem has a conversational tone. The free verse depicts the inner freedom that the speaker feels, and wants to transform into real freedom and equality.
The answer would be B. sickness
Oberon instructs Puck, his helper, to find a magic love potion and to give it to Lysander so as to make him fall in love with Hermia. However, Puck makes a mistake and because of it, both Lysander and Demetrius fall in love with Helena, which is not something Oberon wanted to happen.
The use of alternative past and satirical language brings out the narrator’s and the people’s understandings of Scoresby’s wartime blunders create humor and contribute to the narrator’s point of view
<u>Explanation:</u>
In the short story "Luck", Twain is able to illustrate the inner feelings of an ordinary person after his success. The use of alternative past and satirical language brings out the narrator’s and the people’s understandings of Scoresby’s wartime blunders create humor and contribute to the narrator’s point of view.
He explains to his readers using humor and satire to state that it is not right to praise people who has gained success through luck because even in the story, the clergyman states that it was Scoresby's luck as he was basically a fool.